The Tipton Daily Tribune from Tipton, Indiana · Page 2

PAGE 2 THE TIPTON DAILY TRIBUNE Thursday, Dec. 3, 1964 TIPTON DAILY TRIBUNE SUBSCRIPTION RATES _By ; Carrier, In City, Per Week :.: -—. 35 cenfs By Mail, One Year, Tipton and Adjacerrf Counties. $8.00 ' Member United Press International News Service Entered as Second Class Matter Oct. 4, 1895 at the Postoffice in Tipton, Indiana, Under the Act of Congress of March 3,1879 PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY BY TRIBUNE PUBLISHING COMPANY 221-223 East Jefferson Street. Tipton, Indiana. Telephone OS 5-2115 ROUND TOWN AND THE CLOCK With the Tribune by R. D. Maney can see them. Old Glory and the State of Indiana! Helps keep the kids on their toes ... remembering their heritage! CHURCHES URGED TO JOIN SAFETY CAMPAIGN THE CHURCHES OF INDIANA are asked to join in a Safety Campaign during the month of December. It is a part of the year-end highway campaign. "DRIVE SO THAT others may live" ... is the slogan . . . and the event is sponsored by the Indiana Office of Traffic Safety with local officials cooperating. PACKETS OF MATERIALS are being mailed to 5,000 clergy throughout the State. Suggested activities include sermons, discussions in classes and safety talks ... also responsibility of both driver and pedestrian. •IT IS HOPED that all churches cooperate . .. even if it would be to a small degree. WHO SAID THIS? "THE PRESIDENCY OF the United States is no place for a timid or torpid spirit. The basic freedoms—have taken on a new meaning in our time. They are a part of our heritage . . . and from that heritage a President must draw the goals and guidance best suited for the time. He must be determined to preserve in the future—what he has received from the past"? . PLENTY OF TALENT CANON CITY, Colo. (UPI)— Democratic state Rep. Star Caywood, locked himself out of his car at the state penitentiary Wednesday. An inmate from the prison's medium security section took only a few minutes to open a window of Caywood's car and hand him the keys. "We have all kinds of talent here," a guard said. THE BOBBY BAKER case is sure one for'the books . . . and no matter where the blame is ... it should be • placed in order that the people of this country may feel a sense of security against 'freeloading' and 'hanky..panky' by government officials . . . and those who may be working for—or with them. R T BAKER TOOK THE Fifth as might be expected but the 71 year old McCloskey did not evade any issues ... in fact he stole the spotlight with his ag- -.••gressive bombast a'gpirist ?he questioners ... in denying charges made by Reynolds ... so • "Called 'bagman'! • ' ' .. UNLESS THE LEGISLATORS - have as much contempt for the .voter of this country, as Baker displayed, they should in some 1 manner force a surrender of . papers which Baker refuses to let be submitted as testimony . and the man should either nave to testify ... or face the •consequences. R T IT WOULD SEEM, on the sur- j face, that Baker is receiving! ..^preferential treatment . . . with ^ghts that might 'confuse him' : "being turned off, etc. t THE REFUSAL OF Baker to - surrender records will have to be handled by a higher authority! —we presume. Then we shall be 1 able to make a clearer picture of the whole matter. That Mr. Baker has the audacity of someone confident that he will never be 'reached', seems apparent .. . but then things could happen -to change that feeling to one of humbleness ... if the case is to • be pursued. Investigations of this sort have a way of faltering "... and becoming LOST". . . after the principals feel that the public is not as interestedjpaTbe- fore. CAREFUL DRIVING "*.""-" WE WERE ON the scene shortly 'after an accident yes- terday afternoon . . . on S. R. 213, halfway to Windfall. Road conditions most certainly were ~ a factor in this case . . . where _ two cars were smashed . . . and - two young men were injured. PLEASE BE CAREFUL dur- - ing this present weather . . . ~ when it is so easy to slide . . . swerve ... or fail to make a - .good stop when needed. Drive -slower, be more alert to the other fellow ... it may save a life—either yours or his. REMEMBER ALSO—Christ- mas shopping has started in full blast . . . and there will be more people 'on the go' ... and on the road. If you are in a car : . . watch for pedestrians crossing the street ... if you are temporarily a pedestrian (and that's something we all are—at one time or another) . . . watch for automobiles." AREN'T WE ALL? IF YOU ARE TIRED of filling out forms and reports for the government. . . here's a chance to beef'about it! THE U. S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE wants solid evi- _ dence of how various forms sent - out by government agencies— - are duplicated . . . what it might cost a. company to duplicate .-' them . . . and the purpose they _- -serve. A House committee is to - investigate at the next session o^ Congress . . . to find out -• whether or not—some ought to ~. J>e 'cut out'.' A chance for the harassed businessmen of the 2 fcpuntry to rise up — we would - say! ROUND TOWN—COUNTY * WE HAVE HAD quite a few / calls regarding a weatherman " _'at WFBM T-V,' Jerry Zimmer; - man. Folks were right in as- "rsuming that Jerry was a Tip- ZTHbn product. He is retired from r* Mhe AF and was last stationed at ~ "Sen Antonio, Texas, Jerry r started his T-V reporting in Alaska. He now lives in Carme!,'' Indiana. The weatherman is a graduate of the class '42' of V T.H.S.,' son of Harry Timmer- man, deceased, and Dorothy .'.. Canfield . .' . now living in - Crawfordsvllle. - R T - .WORKMEN WERE OUT ' t>rightand early this a.m., get. ting the snow ... not trucked away by the State iboys.yoff- the '. middle of the jtrefct. . . and ged ting rCady-fdr' future' develop* nients.„.. .. / ., • ' " "• R -.T • SOME VERY PRETTY snow scenes Round-' Town. The flags -flying at Jefferson .school are -.very impressive . ..now out on a front yard mast. .'. where all Obituaries DETROIT (UPI) — Joseph M. Dodge, Detroit banker who served in government posts under four presidents and was budget director under President Eisenhower, died Wednesday. Dodge/ who was 74, had been in ill health for several months. Immediate cause of death was attributed to a heart attack. Born in Detroit, Dodge was honorary chairman of the Detroit Bank and Trust Co. at the time of his death. He had spent nearly all his career in banking. Advertise In The Tribune Send greetings daily, with a Christmas gift subscription to THE TIPTON -DAILY TRIBUNE. PRINCESS GARDNER® fa tt anland" FRENCH PURSE SJQOO plus tax Charming pastel flowers embroidered on Matt Lustra Cowhide. Colors, light blue, pure white. ••''. 'Matching^pieces front $3.50 : JL ed TELEVISION PROGRAM WISH (Channel 8) Thursday, December 3, 1964 4:00 Secret Storm Jack Benny Santa Claus Early .Show Early Show News-CronMte News-Hickox The 'Munsters Perry Mason Password Baileys of Balboa The Defenders News-Hickox Sports-Late Show Late Sbow Friday, December 4, 1964 7:30 Chapel Door Town & Country Capt. Kangaroo Coffee Cup Theater . Mike Wallace News I Love Lucy Andy Griffith Real McCoys Love of Life. Search for Tomorrow 12:45 Guiding Light 1:00 World at One 1:30 As the World Turns 2:00 Password 2:30 Houseparty 3:00 To Tell the Truth 3:30 Edge of Night 4:30 5:00 5:15 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 9:00 9:30 10:00 11:00 11:15 12:00 7:45 8:00 9:00 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:00 12:00 12:30 WFBM (Channel 6) Thursday, December 3, 1964 4 :00 Match Game Bernie Herman Presents Bernie Herman Presents Bernie Herman Presents Huntley-Brinkley News-Caldwell Daniel Boone Dr. Kildare Hazel (c) Suspense Theater (c) News-Caldwell Weather-Sports Tonight (c) Tonight (c) Friday, December 4, 1964 30 Today Today Movie Party What's This Song! (c) Concentration Jeopardy (c) Say When (c) Easy Money Let's Make a Deal (e) Loretta Young The Doctors Another World You Don't Say (c) 4:30 6:00 ., 6:30 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:30 9:30 10:00 11:00 11:15 11:30 12:00 8:00 9:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 jewel ler WLW-I (Channel 13) Thursday, December 3, 1964 4:00 Trailmaster Bill Jackson Rifleman \ News -Atkins ; News-Cochran Cheyenne Flintstones (c) Donna Reed My Three Sons Bewitched Peyton Place' Jimmy Dean News-Atkins Weather-Sports 77 Sunset Strip 77 Sunset Strip Friday,.December 4, 1964 7:30 Geo. Willeford Casper & Co. Jack LaLanne Kindergarten College- King and Odie Don MelvohV Show Don Melvoin Show Paul Dixon (c) Missing Links 50-50 Club (c) 50-50 Club (c) Tennessee Ernie Ford Price Is Right Day in Court General Hospital Young Marrieds 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:15 6:30 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 11:00 11:15 12:00 11:30 7:45 8:00 8:30 9:15 9:30 10:00 11:00 11:30 12:00 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 WTTV (Channel 4) Thursday, December 3, 1964 4:00 Mickey Mouse Club 4:30 Superman 5:00 Popeye and Janie •5:30 Rocky 5:45 Popeye and Janie 6:30 Yogi Bear 6:30 Leave it to Beaver 7:00 World Beyond 8:00 World Beyond Lloyd .Thaxton News-Ungersma 10 O'clock Movie 10 O'clock Movie Les Crane Les Crane Friday, December 4, 10:30 Spanish Course Reel Adventure Billie Boucher Lunchtime Theater Girl Talk Milady's Matinee Milay's Matinee 3:00; Milady's Matinee 3:30 Santa Claus 9:00 9:45 10:00 11:00 11:30 12:00 11:00 11:30 12:00 1:00 1:30 2:00 1964 Television In Review Indebtedness Hurting Progress Alliance By JACK BRANNAN United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — Underdeveloped and isolated rural farming areas in Latin America present one of the major obstacles to fulfillment of Alliance for Progress goals. Said an Inter-American Committee on the Alliance (CIAP): "One problem emerges above any other in a broad view of the. Latin American scene—the problem of modernizing rural life... "On the other hand, food output is lagging behind the in- Jcrease in population, and the gap between rural and urban ways of life within Latin America, is becoming more acute." Recent population surveys have shown that Latin Ameri- By H.D. QUIGG United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) — Danny c a ' s 3 P er cent annual Popu'a- fcaye was - we might as well.tion increase is the biggest in admit we well nigh rolled on'.tl* But saiv ^ s also the floor — great. So was Art Carney. So was Pearl Bailey. Kaye had the luck Wednesday night to have with him on his CBS show one of the great popular song stylists in American history, Miss Bailey. And one of the great comedy actors, Carney. But it was Kaye who carried off the honors as the hero of a grand spoof on the whole era of gangster movies: Pathetic Pictures presents "Murder, Maestro, Please." Based on the book "See Rumania on $5 a Day." . And Carney did a most deft travesty of the gangster who used to roam the silver screen in his portrayal of Big Joe Carrots, head of the Succotash gang. It was a pleasure. CBS News took a look Wednesday night M the world's biggest city — Tokyo, the place that the B29's were working over just 20 years ago. If what appeared on the screen is an accurate assessment, the mysterious East, has lost its mystery. The dress in Tokyo is almost uniformly Western, the problems Western, the slum section painfully Western. The big industrialists shown at lunch were eating with forks, not chopsticks, and on the weekends they played golf. The taxicabs were said to have "kamikazi" drivers, an institution endemic in the Western world. The new skyscrapers were upended shoeboxes — ,an architectural calamity that seems to have been visited on the whole world in our generation. There was even a German beerhall in mid-Tokyo. "Five Faces of Tokyo" portrayed the great town "through the eyes, in the words, of five of its people." At times the project seemed to be a bit too ambitious, but the hour-long special had many moments of enjoyment. (First, there was a young man, Yuji Nakano, who "came to Tokyo three years ago from a farm in the north" and became a factory worker: Then, an old man, Tokutaro Takada, a maker of floor matting. And a whitecollar worker, Akihito Haga, married one year and his wife working. A woman politician and women's rights worker: Sumiko Tamaka. And finally — Tatsuzo Mizukami, president of one of the largest trading companies, who told of his "arranged marriage" of 30 years' duration. His wife contributed an amusing bit about her favorite pastime, arranging marriages, and confided that her capitalist husband "works all day and on the weekends he plays golf — he is terribly athletic!" Partial text of a rock 'n' roll lyric heard on ABC's "Shindig": "Hurry ... hurry ... hurry ... hurry ... hurry hurry" Yeah, yeah, yeah.. show that the continent's farm production has increased little, if any. Begun Agrarian Reform The CIAP report noted that several nations already had acknowledged the farming and rural problems and had begun agrarian reform programs. Peru and Ecuador were among the leaders in this field. But the problem has yet to be fully met, CIAP said. "It is heartening to observe the beginning, in one Latin American country after another, of a new emphasis and priority for agricultural development," the report said. "Many countries have enacted legal measures of agrarian reform, but this is still a" field where a much greater and deeper efofrt is needed." Following the elimination of the feudal-type land tenure systems and the waste of productive land, the CIAP recommend- GET HOLIDAY CASH FOR HOLIDAY SHOPPING and DE3T CONSOLIDATION .'On Signature, Car or Furniture --' KEN SULT Manager Stop in or call •Ml N:M»hv x oS 5-741? _ _^ ed a five-point program designed to increase not only agricultural production but the social and economic welfare of the farmer as well. Lists - Recommendations The recommendations were: —Improve marketing arrangements between the cities and the farms as a means of providing . better 'distribution and .higher prices for farm products. The key element in this is transportation development. —Provide not only agricultural needs but also domestic products to the farmer at reasonable prices as a means of increasing his incentive. —Provide the , farmer with greater credit at more reasonable, long-term rates. —Provide the farmer with technical assistance, such as advice from qualified agents. —C o n d u c t agricultural research to improve the techniques of farming and the quality of farm" products. The report asserted: "The Latin American nations must look.'. .to the modernization of agriculture.. .as a source of industrial raw materials, diversified export commodities, and as a market for the products of Latin American industry." SIGN SUIT CLAYTON, Mo. (UPI)—Last June John J. Cullen offered his own front yard as the location for neighboring Marvin Koslow swung the hammer and hit Cullen's hand. Wednesday, Cullen sued Koslow for $25,000. CLEAN THIEF LONDON (UPI)—A 46-year- old clerk was fined $14 because she couldn't keep clean honestly- - Almanac By United Press International ' Today is Thursday,- Dect X the 338th day of 1964 with'28 'to* follow: ' 4 l;iAi!i^ The evening stars are Jupiter i and Saturn. Civil War Union Gen. George McClellan was born on this day in 1826. On this day in history: In 1818, Illinois entered the nation'as the 21st state. In 1833, Oberlin College, the first truly co-educational college in the U. S. opened its doors. In 1929, the Ford Motor Company raised daily - wages from six to seven dollars despite the collapse of the stock market. In 1948, the nation learned that microfilm of secret U. S. documents had been found in a hollow pumpkin on the farm of Whittaker Chambers.- A thought for the day — British statesman Sir ' Winston Churchill said: "There is no finer investment for any community than putting milk into babies." : !*£ Miss Fredith Stovell said she was spending $4 a week on cleaning materials . since a childhood incident left her with an uncontrollable urge to keep clean. This taxed her resources and led her to steal. Wall Street Chatter ' NEW YORK (UPI)— Newton BY Zinder, of.E .r -Hutton & Co. Inc .ysays .thai as VaV result of the decline' in a 'humber of recent fe *s6nsV ftejaarket itself has now reached a point where its action over the next few days could very well provide a clue to its trend over the next several weeksi, if not months. Leslie M 1 . Pollack expects a sort of broadening formation to develop oyer . the next . few months and cautions that this type of market will require extreme selectivity. Stanley Heller & Co. says that no technical damage has yet appeared in the long term market uptrend and it continues to favor a policy of increased investment during periods of market , weakness. GOOSE MAY SWITCH MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) — Roger, a goose with a taste, for beer, may have to switch to scotch. The goose acquired a taste for beer from his master, Edward Davis, who rented him Wednesday to Harold Rose, to promote the movie, "Father Goose." "This goose will drink what I drink," said Rose. He also said he drinks only scotch. AMBULANCE SERVICE...... anytime Day or Night Our Two' Ambulances Are Fully Equipped With Oxygen FUNERAL HOME 216 W. Jefferson OS 5-4780 'WE'RE ON OUR "\ (6000 s WAV TO THE BIS 1 > FOR STORE '.I'M GET- \MDU! TWO A VIEW COHTf^~j^ 'I JUST BOUGHT IffiPB A NEW "'COAT, TOO! ROQUEFORT / ZP" HELPEP ME r-^^ J-MCK IT CUT I y/^afe 'DO VOU A1WAY5V J\ TftVCE YOUR A NO I) HUSBAND V/VTH y ~7/^ *rtU TO HELP PICK J \f OUTJ^C ^^^r jf /OMiy TO \ y^^A IFDR iTTyJ^*^^"^- lit 'I JUST BOUGHT IffiPB A NEW "'COAT, TOO! ROQUEFORT / ZP" HELPEP ME r-^^ J-MCK IT CUT I y/^afe 'DO VOU A1WAY5V J\ TftVCE YOUR A NO I) HUSBAND V/VTH y ~7/^ *rtU TO HELP PICK J \f OUTJ^C ^^^r jf lit 'DO VOU A1WAY5V J\ TftVCE YOUR A NO I) HUSBAND V/VTH y ~7/^ *rtU TO HELP PICK J \f OUTJ^C ^^^r jf RIP KIRBY THIMBLE THEATRE bv ALEX RAYMOND WIMPY SHOUUD HAVE 61VEM THEM TO popeye^ COUSIN 3Y NOWi YA MUST HAVE OONB S0MP1N' TO CHANSB YEKSELFJ YA "DOESN'T LOOK THE S*AMB • 9 BRICK BRADFORD By Claranc* Gro*